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Human bone marrow stem/stromal cell osteogenesis is regulated via mechanically activated osteocyte-derived extracellular vesicles

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-22, 07:34 authored by Kian F. Eichholz, Ian Woods, Mathieu Riffault, Gillian P. Johnson, Michele A. Corrigan, Michelle C. Lowry, Nian Shen, Marie-Noëlle Labour, Kieran Wynne, Lorraine O'Driscoll, David A. Hoey
Bone formation or regeneration requires the recruitment, proliferation, and osteogenic differentiation of stem/stromal progenitor cells. A potent stimulus driving this process is mechanical loading. Osteocytes are mechanosensitive cells which play fundamental roles in coordinating loading-induced bone formation via the secretion of paracrine factors. However, the exact mechanisms by which osteocytes relay mechanical signals to these progenitor cells are poorly understood. Therefore, this study aimed to demonstrate the potency of the mechanically stimulated osteocyte secretome in driving human bone marrow stem/stromal cell (hMSC) recruitment and differentiation, and characterize the secretome to identify potential factors regulating stem cell behavior and bone mechanobiology. We demonstrate that osteocytes subjected to fluid shear secrete a distinct collection of factors that significantly enhance hMSC recruitment and osteogenesis and demonstrate the key role of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in driving these effects. This demonstrates the pro-osteogenic potential of osteocyte-derived mechanically activated extracellular vesicles, which have great potential as a cell-free therapy to enhance bone regeneration and repair in diseases such as osteoporosis.

Funding

Development of New Technologies for the Treatment of Cancers, the Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases.

Council for International Exchange of Scholars

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Innovate UK

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Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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History

Publication

Stem Cells Translational Medicine;pp. 1–17

Publisher

Wiley

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

IRC, SFI, ERC

Language

English

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